Friday, April 6, 2012

Bagamoyo

//Flash-back//


For my final weekend in Tanzania I wanted to go to Bagamoyo, well I would have liked to have flown to Mafia Island of some snorkelling and diving but it was too last minute and I don't really have the funds for that kind of extravagance. Bagamoyo is really close to Dar-es-Salaam, only just over one hour on the bus. It's a historic town with a lot of character, the name actually means 'burn my heart' since it was the final stop off for slaves before there were shipped across to Zanzibar to be sold.


I went with the rasta guy I've been seeing for a little while now, it was supposed to be a final little trip together, a nice day out but unfortunately we argued almost from the moment we stepped off the bus. It turned out to be a bit of a disaster.


We arrived in the morning and sauntered over to the beach, on the way he wanted to stop off at a hostel to check in....what? This was not something that had ever been brought up till now, since he's a skint rasta dude he never has any money, I pay for everything. This is something that has, of course, caused many arguments. I just can't compute in my English brain how he thinks it's ok for me to always pick up the bill. In fact sometimes he orders himself drinks, I think he had a good day of business, only to find out it's on me again. It really annoys me that he never even asks if it's ok. I never thought about it too much, I rarely let guys pay for me, I'd never go out expecting to be bought drinks/food, European culture is hospitable but people pay for their own shit. Being with him makes me concerned that he just sees me as a cash machine because of my nationality. Not really the case, I'm on a budget and a tight one. I stated that we couldn't stay over since I was expected back home later and also had a lot to sort out over the next few days. We left it at that and we found the beach, quiet, overcast, fishing boats anchored in the shallows, empty beachfront restaurants sleepy in the early morning. I'm going to miss the Indian ocean. I love the sea, I love being by the sea, walking along the beach, it's so relaxing watching the waves break standing on the sand in the fresh sea breeze.


The walk led us to an old part of the town so I go my camera out and took photos, Bagamoyo was the first capital of Tanzania, it has a lot of character. I had wanted to make the trip weeks before but not got around to it so I felt happy to finally be walking through the old streets. He was in a rush to do something else and suggested we go to an old graveyard. I wasn't particularly in the mood for that sort of thing but we went. Unfortunately I get a bit annoyed over things like this because it's always on me to pay, therefore it feels like it's ultimately my decision. The guy at the site tried to bribe us to pay more since I was a tourist. I'd had enough of the one price for locals, one price for tourists set-up and endemic bribery in Tanzania so I refused to pay to go in. This made him really sulk, he suggested we leave and go back to Dar to which I refused and said if he wanted to that was fine, I was staying. This seemed me make him furious, but I don't see the point in flogging a dead horse, if we're not in good sync then call it a day and suit ourselves is my philosophy.


We calmed it and had some drinks in the afternoon in a back street bar, not a particularly comfortable or enjoyable place to sit but I suppose it was a good way to see out our last day together seeing as we often go to places like that, incredibly local joints. Then he revved into full gear on his assault on me to get us to stay the night. Impossible, I said, I'm expected home later on. He wasn't having it, we went around in circles for over an hour until finally I said I just don't want to ok. He started sulking and as the evening was drawing in we headed back to Dar-es-Salaam. I thought it was over at that point but felt indifferent, we're not compatible at all and I don't want to be in a relationship with someone who has such limited horizons, it sounds uncompassionate, I feel guilty, I know he's really poor and can't see a way out. I used to associate rasta guys with strength, manliness, now I'm not so sure. Due to the financial dynamic of the relationship and the fact that I had received a better education that him I always felt that our gender roles were being reversed and I didn't like it. It's just a bit of a shame that out final day out together went so badly, as did our final night, but that's a different story...





Fishing boats



Colonial building near the beach front







Bagamoyo an Art College and therefore many artists and stalls selling carvings, paintings and beaded things. It's also a bit of a rasta hang out so they have reggae concerts every now and then













Around Avenida Paulista


High rise buildings are everywhere you look. At night time I feel like I'm in a Georgia O'Keeffe painting walking around this city. As you can see, the glass of this building reflects another. I've never felt so surrounded by structures. It's hard looking at the never ending sea of lights in the city at night just how many people live here. I know I'm only going to see a fraction of what this place has to offer during my stay.


Just off Avenida Paulista is a jungle-like park








Street art




Love this image





And still they want to build more


Antique market on Saturday



I think I lost weight in Tanzania, a combination of the searing heat, amazing yoga classes and a lack of eateries at my instant disposal - unfortunately I'm the kind of person who can be walking along and pass a bakery and not resist the urge to have to get something to eat after that, hungry or not. Walking around Sao Paulo is a serious test to my self control, there are amazing cafes, bakeries, restaurants everywhere you look and it's not dizzyingly hot, something which I never realised affected my appetite, but clearly did. Right next to our hostel is an amazingly good bakery which I've taken to buying cheese and tomato rolls whenever I feel a bit peckish.


We seem to have formed a bit of a group in the hostel which is good because I was feeling apprehensive about solo travel in Latin America but definitely comes with it's drawbacks, we get stuck inside watching football and chatting rather than venturing out to explore the city, good fun but annoying. Also, group decisions sometimes means no decision or bad decision so it's better to just cater for yourself. Most of the time we just explored locally, leaving more adventurous expeditions for the night time. This habit normally meant we took a mid-afternoon stroll around Avenida Paulista and got something to drink.


One day I strayed further and went shopping with a couple of friends. We went to a district known for cheap clothes and had a look around some of the shops. I was tempted to make some purchases but I know my backpack cant fit in anything else, it's totally at it's limit, so much so that during my stop-off in South Africa I sent some surplus items home. Not even able to entertain the idea of buying, after a good look around we went to a Korean restaurant for some lunch. The food kept on coming, plate after place of side dishes and soups, it was delicious. I felt like all I had been eating up to that point was carbs, sandwiches and noodles mainly, so it was nice to eat some vegetables and salad and get some good flavour for a change.


Fashion in Sao Paulo really is something. I managed to pick up a free (discarded) copy of Harper's Bazaar. I wish I could look like a Bazaar woman rather than my current scruffy traveller self. I'm going to do a post about some of the Brazilian brands I have noticed that we don't get back in the UK. Swimwear and tropical print heaven!!

China Town

I took the metro to the China town area of Sao Paulo with a Swiss girl from the hostel, it's in an area called Liberdade. The shops were surprisingly good, one had particularly nice ceramics, home and kitchen items. I wanted to buy some stuff but I currently don't have a home and I carry around my worldly possessions around with me on my back, as beautiful as they were, I don't think I need a set of soup bowls, teapot and cups, no matter how nice the glaze or print. It did make me want to get back to London and find a nice flat and start filling it with beautiful objects. Rediscover some form of domesticity, my own space. One day, one day.


We tried to get into a museum about Asian immigration to Brazil but it wasn't open so we just had a walk around the area. Sao Paulo is a city of skyscrapers and hills! I have no idea why they decided to build such and urban giant on a site that has so many slopes, I felt like I was constantly climbing up and down mini summits on every street.



Asian street lamps


View from a bridge in Chinatown



St Paul's




The square in front of the cathedral had some cool sculptures